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itinerancy
[ ahy-tin-er-uhn-see, ih-tin- ]
noun
- the act of traveling from place to place.
- a going around from place to place in the discharge of duty or the conducting of business.
- a body of itinerants, as ministers, judges, or sales representatives.
- the state of being itinerant.
- the system of rotation governing the ministry of the Methodist Church.
itinerancy
/ ɪˈtɪnərənsɪ; aɪ- /
noun
- the act of itinerating
- Methodist Church the system of appointing a minister to a circuit of churches or chapels
- itinerants collectively
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of itinerancy1
Example Sentences
Literally outside of them, because the institution Padrón leads, Connecticut’s Long Wharf Theater, gave up its physical headquarters to embrace itinerancy as a way to better connect with the communities it serves in and around New Haven.
“In other words, defendant has a history of itinerancy, firearms possession, and lack of candor with law enforcement, all exacerbating his risk of flight,” Lasher wrote.
Itinerancy, life on the road, and establishing a home and community are important themes in Hopinka’s art.
When she took over in 2017, the East Village institution — a haven for boundary-pushing dance, theater and interdisciplinary performance art since its founding as Performance Space 122 in 1980 — was about to reopen its building after seven years of renovation and itinerancy.
Rings of luggage encircling empty carousels in Chicago, in a kind of artistic commentary on capitalism and modern itinerancy.
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